Systems and methods for attaching barrier sheet material to extensible pole assemblies

ABSTRACT

A foot assembly is adapted to be detachably attached to a pole comprising a shaft portion and a ball portion. The foot assembly comprises a foot member defining a first body cavity and a clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly. With the clip member attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion, the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion, at least a portion of the shaft portion, and at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application (Attorney Docket No. P216563) is a continuation application of U.S. Ser. No. 11/985,943, filed Nov. 18, 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,810,771, issued Oct. 12, 2010.

U.S. application Ser. No. 11/985,943 claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/859,622 filed Nov. 17, 2006.

The contents of all applications cited above are incorporated herein by reference.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to systems and methods of supporting sheet material to form a barrier and, in particular, to attachment systems and methods that facilitate the temporary connection of sheet material to an extensible pole assembly during erection of the barrier.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

An extensible pole assembly typically comprises first and second extension members. One of the first and second extension members is slidably received by the other extension member. An extensible pole assembly may comprise more than two extension members, and one of the extension members is typically telescopically received within the other extension member.

An effective length of the extensible pole assembly is defined by the first and second extension members, and this effective length can be changed by sliding the extension members relative to each other. In use, the extensible pole assembly is typically in compression between two objects, and a locking system is used to lock the extension members together to fix the effective length of the extensible pole assembly between the two objects.

First and second foot assemblies are typically attached to the free ends of the first and second extension members, respectively. The foot assemblies define foot portions adapted to engage the shape and surface characteristics of object against which the foot assembly is forced.

Additionally, an advancing system may be arranged between one or both of the free ends of the extension members and the foot assembly associated therewith. If used, the advancing system allows the foot assembly to be displaced in short increments relative to the extension member associated therewith; the foot assembly is securely held in place after each advancement to ensure that the extensible pole assembly is kept in tension during operation of the advancing system.

Extensible pole assemblies are used during a variety of construction activities, such as maintaining a workpiece in place and/or displacing a workpiece. One use of an extension pole is to hold a portion of a barrier sheet in position relative to a structure to the structure into smaller areas. For example, the remodel of a structure may require the construction activities to overlap in time with normal use of the structure as a dwelling or work place. Construction activities can result in contamination of the air that can be a nuisance to people in the area of these activities. Accordingly, a barrier sheet may be installed within the structure to divide the structure into a construction area and a non-construction area. The barrier sheet will thus inhibit movement of contaminated air between the construction and non-construction areas.

To support the barrier sheet within a structure, one or more extensible pole assemblies are typically extended between the floor and the ceiling structure. The barrier sheet is held against the ceiling by the uppermost portions of the extensible pole assemblies.

The need thus exists for improved systems and methods for facilitating the use of general purpose extensible pole assemblies to support a barrier sheet.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention may be embodied as a foot assembly adapted to be detachably attached to a pole comprising a shaft portion and a ball portion comprising a foot member defining a first body cavity and a clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly. With the clip member attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion, the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion, at least a portion of the shaft portion, and at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole.

The present invention may also be embodied as a barrier system comprising at least one pole defining a shaft portion and a ball portion, sheet material, a foot member defining a first body cavity, a clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly, and at least one attachment member. With the clip member attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion, the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion, at least a portion of the shaft portion, and at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole. The at least one attachment member secures a portion of the sheet material to the foot member.

The present invention may also be embodied as a method of forming a pole assembly comprising the following steps. A pole comprising a shaft portion and a ball portion is provided. A foot member defining a first body cavity is provided. A clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly is provided. The clip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion. The ball portion is inserted into the first body cavity such that foot member engages at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a side elevation view depicting an example barrier system in which an attachment system of the present invention may be used;

FIG. 2 is a side elevation view of an example attachment system of the present invention;

FIG. 3 is a top plan view of the example attachment system depicted in FIG. 1;

FIG. 4 is an exploded bottom perspective view of the example attachment system depicted in FIG. 1;

FIG. 5 is a section view taken along lines 5-5 in FIG. 3 illustrating engagement of the example attachment system depicted in FIG. 1 with an extensible pole assembly and sheet material;

FIG. 6 is a section view taken along lines 6-6 in FIG. 2; and

FIG. 7 is a section view similar to FIG. 5 illustrating disengagement of the example attachment system depicted in FIG. 1 from the sheet material.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Referring initially to FIGS. 5 and 7 of the drawing, depicted therein is an attachment system 20 for detachably attaching a sheet material 22 to an extensible pole member 24 forming part of an extensible pole assembly. FIG. 1 illustrates that a plurality of such attachment systems 20 may be used with a plurality of such extensible pole assembly members 24 to support the sheet material 22 relative to floor and ceiling surfaces 26 and 28. So supported, the sheet material 22 may be arranged to form a barrier system. The barrier system formed by the sheet material 22 is conventional and will not be described herein beyond what is necessary for a complete understanding of the construction and operation of the present invention.

FIG. 4 illustrates that the example attachment system 20 comprises is a foot assembly 30 comprising a foot member 32, an optional pad member 34, and a first attractable member 36. FIG. 4 further illustrates that the example attachment system 20 further comprises a second attractable member 40 and an optional clip member 42.

FIGS. 4, 5, and 7 illustrate that the example foot member 32 comprises a body portion 50 from which extends at least one arm portion 52 that supports a flange portion 54. The body portion 50 defines a connecting portion 56 and a longitudinal axis A of the attachment system 20. The example foot member 32 comprises four of the arm portions 52.

The example body portion 50 defines a first body cavity 60 and a second body cavity 62. The flange portion 54 defines a flange opening 64. As will be described in further detail below, the example first body cavity 60 is adapted to allow the connecting portion 56 to engage an end of the extensible pole member 24. The second body cavity 62 is sized and dimensioned to receive the first attractable member 36. The flange opening 64 is sized and dimensioned to allow the second attractable member 40 to pass through the flange opening 64.

As perhaps best shown in FIGS. 2, 5, and 7, the arm portions 52 are configured to space the flange portion 54 from the body portion 50 such that an upper surface 50 a of the body portion 50 is spaced from an upper surface 54 a of the flange portion 54 along the longitudinal axis A. The second body cavity 62 is formed in the upper surface 50 a of the body portion 50 along the longitudinal axis A. In the example foot member 32, the first attractable member 36 is snugly received within the second body cavity 62 with an exposed surface 36 a of the member 36 flush with the upper surface 50 a of the body portion 50.

The example arm portions 52 are made of a resilient material. Accordingly, while the upper surface 50 a of the body portion 50 is parallel to the upper surface 54 a of the flange portion 54 when no asymmetrical forces are applied to the flange portion 54, the upper surface 54 a of the is flange portion 54 may be at an angle relative to the upper surface 50 a of the body portion 50 when asymmetrical forces are applied to the flange portion 54. The resilient arm portions 52 thus allow the foot member 32 to deflect or deform such that an angle between the upper surface 54 a of the flange portion is at an angle of other than 90 degrees relative to the longitudinal axis A.

The exact configuration of the connecting portion 56 is not critical to any particular implementation of an attachment system of the present invention. The example first body cavity 60 formed in the connecting portion is defined by a generally cylindrical inner side wall surface 50 b and rounded inner end wall surface 50 c of the body portion 50. The first body cavity 60 is thus designed to receive an end of the extensible pole member 24 such that, at least while the pole member 24 is in compression, the foot assembly 30 stays in place during the process of assembling a barrier system.

The example extensible pole member 24 comprises a shaft portion 70 that terminates at its upper end in a ball portion 72. The diameter of the inner side wall surface 50 b of the first body cavity 60 is approximately the same as a diameter of the ball portion 72, and the inner end wall surface 50 c of the first body cavity 60 is defined by a radius of curvature that is approximately the same as that of the ball portion 72. The first body cavity 60 thus allows the ball portion 72 to come into contact with the end wall surface 50 c thereof as shown in FIGS. 5 and 7.

In many situations, the engagement of the shaft portion 70 and ball portion 72 of the extensible pole member 24 with the first body cavity 60 foot member 32 will be sufficient to allow a barrier system to be formed using the foot assembly 30. However, to form a more rigid connection between the foot assembly 30 and the extensible pole member 24, the optional clip member 42 may be used.

As perhaps best shown in FIG. 4, the example clip member 42 comprises a clip portion 80, a radial flange portion 82, and a longitudinal flange portion 84. A channel 86 extends through the clip portion 80 from a flange surface 82 a on the radial flange portion 82 to a tip surface 80 a on the clip portion 80. The clip portion 80 defines a cylindrical surface portion 80 b and a tapered surface portion 80 c. Guide surfaces 80 d and 80 e are formed on the clip portion 80 on either side of the channel 86.

A distance between the guide surfaces 80 c and 80 d is slightly smaller than a diameter of the shaft portion 70 of the extensible pole member 24, and a diameter of the channel 86 is substantially the same as a diameter of the shaft portion 70. Additionally, an outer diameter of the cylindrical surface portion 80 b of the clip portion 80 is substantially the same as the diameter of the inner side wall surface 50 b, while a diameter of the tapered surface portion 80 c decreases away from the cylindrical surface portion 80 b.

In use, the guide surfaces 80 d and 80 e are brought into contact with the shaft portion 70 of the extensible pole member 24. The application of deliberate manual pressure on the clip portion 80 towards the extensible pole assembly causes the clip portion 80 to deform slightly such that the guide surfaces 80 d and 80 e separate sufficiently to allow the shaft portion 70 to enter the channel 86. At this point, the clip member 42 may be slid up such that first the tapered surface portion 80 c and then the cylindrical surface portion 80 b enters the first body cavity 60. At this point, the tip surface 80 a on the clip member 42 engages the ball portion 72 of the extensible pole assembly as shown in FIGS. 5 and 7.

FIG. 6 shows that the clip member 42 snugly occupies the space that would otherwise exist between the inner side wall surface 50 b and the surface of the shaft portion 70 of the extensible pole member 24. Friction between the clip member 42, pole shaft portion 70, and the inner side wall surface 50 b thus inhibits movement of the foot member 32 relative to the extensible pole member 24. At this point, a longitudinal axis B of the extensible pole member 24 is substantially aligned with the longitudinal axis A of the foot member 32.

As depicted in FIGS. 2, 5, and 7, the pad member 34 may be attached to the upper surface 54 a of the flange portion 54. The example pad member 34 is made of resiliently compressible material and may reduce the likelihood of damage to the ceiling surface 28 by the foot assembly 30. The pad member may be glued or otherwise connected to the flange upper surface 54 a; the example pad member 34 is secured to the flange portion 54 by projections 90 that extend into corresponding holes 92 (FIG. 4) in the flange portion 54.

As shown in FIGS. 5 and 7, the sheet material 22 is detachably attached to the foot assembly 30 by arranging a portion of the sheet material 22 above the flange opening 64 and then bringing the second attractable member 40 into proximity with the first attractable member 36. The members 36 and 40 attract each other such that, when they are brought into proximity with each other, the attraction force clamps the sheet material 22 between the attractable members 36 and 40 (FIG. 5) to attach the sheet material 22 to the end of the extensible pole assembly 24. However, deliberate application of manual force may be used to pull the second attractable member 40 away from the first attractable member 36 as shown in FIG. 7 to detach sheet material 22 from the end of the extensible pole assembly 24.

In the example system 20, one of the first and second attractable members 36 and 40 is a magnet and the other of the first and second attractable members 40 is a piece of metal that is magnetically attracted to the magnet. By making the first attractable member 36 a magnet and the second attractable member 36 a metal disc, any small piece of metal (e.g., nut, washer, plug) may be used as the second attractable member 36 should the original metal disk become lost.

The spacing of the upper surface 50 a of the body portion 50 from the upper surface 54 a of the flange portion 54 described above creates a cavity between the body upper surface 50 a when the foot assembly 30 engages the ceiling surface 28. This cavity accommodates the second attractable member 36 depicted in FIGS. 4, 5, and 7 and many other sizes and shapes of second attractable members without allowing the second attractable member to come into contact with the ceiling surface 28.

If the extensible pole assembly 24 is not perfectly vertical, the longitudinal axis B of the pole 24 may be at an angle relative to the ceiling surface 28. To accommodate this angle and still allow the flange upper surface 54 a to be parallel to the ceiling surface 28, the arm portions 52 can deform slightly as generally described above.

The scope of the present invention should be determined by the claims appended hereto and not the foregoing detailed description. 

1. A foot assembly adapted to be detachably attached to a pole comprising a shaft portion and a ball portion, comprising: a foot member defining a first body cavity; a clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly; whereby with the clip member attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion, the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion, at least a portion of the shaft portion, and at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole.
 2. A foot assembly as recited in claim 1, in which: the ball portion defines a first radius that is larger than a second radius defined by the shaft portion; and a thickness of at least a portion of the clip member is predetermined such that the clip member frictionally engages both the shaft portion and the foot member when the slip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion and the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion.
 3. A foot assembly as recited in claim 1, in which: the ball portion defines a first radius that is larger than a second radius defined by the shaft portion; and a thickness of at least a portion of the clip member is predetermined such that the clip member fills at least a portion of an annular space between the shaft portion and the foot member when the slip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion and the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion.
 4. A foot assembly as recited in claim 1, further comprising: a first attachment member; and a second attachment member; wherein the foot member supports the first magnetic member; sheet material is arranged between the first and second attachment members; and magnetic attraction between the first and second attachment members holds sheet material relative to the foot member.
 5. A foot assembly as recited in claim 4, in which the foot member defines a second body cavity, where the second attachment member is arranged substantially within the second body cavity when the sheet material is held relative to the foot member.
 6. A foot assembly as recited in claim 4, in which: the first attachment member is a magnet; and the second attachment member is a magnetically attractable member.
 7. A barrier system comprising: at least one pole defining a shaft portion and a ball portion; sheet material; a foot member defining a first body cavity; a clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly; at least one attachment member; wherein with the clip member attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion, the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion, at least a portion of the shaft portion, and at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole; and the at least one attachment member secures a portion of the sheet material to the foot member.
 8. A barrier system as recited in claim 7, in which the foot member defines a second body cavity, where the at least one attachment member is arranged substantially within the second body cavity when the sheet material is held relative to the foot member.
 9. A barrier system as recited in claim 7, in which the foot member defines: a longitudinal axis; a first surface; and a second surface; wherein the second surface is spaced from the first surface along the longitudinal axis; the second attachment member holds the sheet material against the first surface when the sheet material is held relative to the foot member; the sheet material is held between the second surface and an object when the sheet material is supported in a barrier configuration; and the second surface is spaced from the object when the sheet material is supported in the barrier configuration.
 10. A foot assembly as recited in claim 7, in which: the ball portion defines a first radius that is larger than a second radius defined by the shaft portion; and a thickness of at least a portion of the clip member is predetermined such that the clip member frictionally engages both the shaft portion and the foot member when the slip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion and the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion.
 11. A foot assembly as recited in claim 7, in which: the ball portion defines a first radius that is larger than a second radius defined by the shaft portion; and is a thickness of at least a portion of the clip member is predetermined such that the clip member fills at least a portion of an annular space between the shaft portion and the foot member when the slip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion and the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion.
 12. A barrier system as recited in claim 7, further comprising: a first attachment member; and a second attachment member; wherein the foot member supports the first attachment member; sheet material is arranged between the first and second attachment members; and magnetic attraction between the first and second attachment members holds the sheet material relative to the foot member.
 13. A barrier system as recited in claim 12, in which the foot member defines a second body cavity, where the second attachment member is arranged substantially within the second body cavity when the sheet material is held relative to the foot member.
 14. A foot assembly as recited in claim 12, in which: the first attachment member is a magnet; and the second attachment member is a magnetically attractable member.
 15. A method of forming a pole assembly comprising the steps of: is providing a pole comprising a shaft portion and a ball portion; providing a foot member defining a first body cavity; providing a clip member adapted to be detachably attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly; attaching the clip member to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion; inserting the ball portion into the first body cavity such that foot member engages at least a portion of the clip member to detachably attach the foot member to the pole.
 16. A method as recited in claim 15, in which: the step of providing the pole comprises the steps of forming the ball portion with a first radius that is larger than a second radius of the shaft portion; and predetermined a thickness of at least a portion of the clip member such that the clip member frictionally engages both the shaft portion and the foot member when the slip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion and the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion.
 17. A method as recited in claim 15, in which: the step of providing the pole comprises the steps of forming the ball portion with a first radius that is larger than a to second radius of the shaft portion; and predetermining a thickness of at least a portion of the clip member such that the clip member fills at least a portion of an annular space between the shaft portion and the foot member when the slip member is attached to the shaft portion of the pole assembly adjacent to the ball portion and the first body cavity of the foot member receives the ball portion.
 18. A method as recited in claim 15, further comprising the steps of: providing a first attachment member; providing a second attachment member; supporting the first attachment member on the foot member; arranging sheet material between the first and second attachment members such that magnetic attraction between the first and second attachment members holds sheet material relative to the foot member.
 19. A method as recited in claim 18, in which the foot member defines a second body cavity, further comprising the step of arranging the second attachment member substantially within the second body cavity when the sheet material is held relative to the foot member.
 20. A method as recited in claim 18, in which: the first attachment member is a magnet; and the second attachment member is a magnetically attractable member. 